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Introduction to Linux - A Hands on Guide

This guide was created as an overview of the Linux Operating System, geared toward new users as an exploration tour and getting started guide, with exercises at the end of each chapter.
For more advanced trainees it can be a desktop reference, and a collection of the base knowledge needed to proceed with system and network administration. This book contains many real life examples derived from the author's experience as a Linux system and network administrator, trainer and consultant. They hope these examples will help you to get a better understanding of the Linux system and that you feel encouraged to try out things on your own.

Greetings, I'm new to bash scripting. I am writing a script to help me in making gif images from a large video. I've written bash code to successfully take an input video, output 2 things: a video at the desired output size with 10 fps, and a png for each frame in that video (let's say, 59000 images) then the script watermarks all of those images.

The images are named, say, test00001.png - test59704.png

Now, seeing as Nautilus chokes and dies a firey death on a folder with that many files, I want to be able to have a command where I move a subset of files to another folder. I see it taking the start frame number, the end frame number, and the folder name, and automatically running a for loop moving them all. I understand how to do that in theory, but in making my for loop, how can I preserve my incrementing number to have 5 digits?

I'm not even sure if that would work, but before I can test it, the problem would be if I want to copy frames 9-200, the script would look for "test9.png" instead of "test00009.png" and I don't know how to force 5 digits. I thought about doing some sort of conditional switch testing the range of the value, but that seemed inelegant. Any help is appreciated!

Ah. I see, it's counting 'eval' as the first element in the list. You can ditch the eval, and get the same result, minus 'testeval.png'.

I think perl will do something with the leading zeros in such a context, but in shell scripts, anything that looks like a number will be turned in to a number at the parsing stage, thus you need printf to format a number in to a string with leading 0s after the fact.

This does not require a for loop, since all the filenames are generated on the command line, using the specified format. The only limit could be the long argument list (the shell will complain about that, without actually moving anything). If this is the case, a for loop - as those ones suggested above - is the suitable solution.

You can also create a function, accepting three arguments: the start number, the end one and the destination directory:

Code:

function mvpng () {
mv $(seq -f 'test%05.0f.png' $1 $2) $3
}

This manages only fixed file names, but you can develop the function adding some checks and trying to manage different file names, as well. Just to give you an idea.